Cash Drawer Always Short? A Systematic Way to Find the Cause
Small daily discrepancies feel trivial. But multiplied over a month, the number is significant. Here's how to trace the cause systematically.
Small Discrepancies Add Up
$2 short per day sounds minor. Multiply by 30 days — that's $60/month. $720/year. "Probably just change miscalculations" might be true, but without data you're just guessing.
Step 1: Separate Shifts per Cashier
If all cashiers share one drawer without separate shifts, you'll never know who's responsible. Each cashier opens their own shift, counts opening cash, and closes with a physical count.
Step 2: Track Every Cash Movement
Cash in from payments is automatic. But cash out beyond change? Denomination exchanges, safe deposits, petty cash — every movement must be recorded. Without this, you have blind spots in your cash accounting.
Step 3: Compare Expected vs Actual
At shift close, the system calculates what should be there based on all movements. The cashier counts what's actually there. The difference is variance.
Step 4: Look for Patterns, Not Incidents
One day of variance? Could be normal. Three consecutive days from the same cashier? That's a pattern worth investigating — could be a training issue, process issue, or something else.